The Daily EO: April 23rd, 2013

I wasn’t alive when they said “Never trust anyone over 30”. Back in the 60s anything went – right? I don’t know, but my university days were much different. Yeah, if I wanted to I could have found any mind-bending drug I wanted or I could have taken 8 years to get an undergrad degree. I met some of those types. But I also met a lot of people who really thought they knew what it was all about. In my 20s, I knew what it was all about. I was never going to have to “find myself”. I wasn’t going to sit around and “expand my consciousness.” People like that were flakes. I was firmly within the straight and narrow and happy to be there.

There is a belief that as we get older we get set in our ways. Less able to learn new things and accept new ways of thinking. I don’t believe that now that I am getting older. I think I am less certain of what it is all about than I was in my 20s. I am more open to thinking that perhaps I don’t know everything, that perhaps following all the rules in the mainstream world may not work for me or for someone else. I guess I am more willing to say Perhaps.

My friend is trying to find her way right now. And 20 years ago – when I met said friend – I would have rolled my eyes at her and said “Seriously! Angels? Spirits? Breathing? Come one! Pull yourself together! ” But now, I think “Well, who am I to know? If it is working for her (and others) then well . .hmmm. . . Maybe there is something there.” Maybe it is me who is missing out in living my life to the fullest by not partaking in as many schools of thought and methods of introspection as I could? I too have had to search for my path, spending long days wondering how could things have gone so wrong if I had done everything right?

Last year I tackled religion and spirituality in this blog on Good Friday. In rereading today, I still think there is more to out there than we can understand, truth that we choose to see to the best of our ability coloured with our bias and perception. I certainly didn’t begin my adulthood with openness, and while I am certainly opinionated on things like wedding etiquette, but now I am willing to say “Perhaps” on may other things.